Gully v. State

658 N.W.2d 114, 2002 Iowa App. LEXIS 1320, 2002 WL 31757460
CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedDecember 11, 2002
Docket01-1769
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 658 N.W.2d 114 (Gully v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gully v. State, 658 N.W.2d 114, 2002 Iowa App. LEXIS 1320, 2002 WL 31757460 (iowactapp 2002).

Opinion

SACKETT, Chief Judge.

Applicant-appellant Marlon Gully appeals the district court’s denial of his application for postconviction relief following his guilty plea and sentence for second-degree sexual abuse, enhanced, in violation of Iowa Code sections 709.3 (1997), 901A.l(a) and 901A.2(3); third-degree kidnapping, in violation of sections 710.1 and 710.4; and first-degree burglary, in violation of sections 713.1 and 713.3. Applicant claims that the district court improperly sentenced him to an enhanced term of incarceration on the sexual abuse charge pursuant to Iowa Code section 901A.2(3), *116 and that he was rendered ineffective assistance of counsel for several reasons. We affirm applicant’s conviction but modify his sentence to strike the enhancement on the second-degree sexual abuse conviction.

I. BACKGROUND FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

According to the minutes of testimony, between 4:30 and 5:00 a.m. on July 28, 1997, in Burlington, Iowa, Marcy Rooney awoke to find an unknown assailant in her bedroom, tugging on her shorts. She did not see the assailant’s face but noticed he wore a gold ring. The assailant threw a jacket over her head and raped her at gunpoint. He repeatedly penetrated her vagina and anus with his penis while holding a gun to her temple and threatening her not to look at him. He also penetrated her vagina with his gun, and following that, with a bottle of lotion, squeezing the lotion into her vagina. Following the sexual assault, the assailant tied Marcy’s hands behind her with a pillowcase, wrapped a sheet around her face, and forced her into the closet. After waiting in the closet for about ten minutes, Marcy proceeded downstairs in the apartment where she found the screen to the living room window had been removed, the rear door was open, and the phone was off the hook.

Following the incident authorities were informed by Cynthia Caulkins that she had lent applicant a BB gun the night of the assault. She indicated that he was making advances to women at a party he attended and that he had left around 4:30 the morning of July 28. She further indicated he was wearing a gold ring. Authorities discovered applicant had previously registered in Des Moines County as a sex-offender but had transferred his parole to the State of Missouri. Believing that applicant may have returned to Des Moines County from Missouri and failed to re-register, Detective Klein located him. The applicant indicated he had come to Des Moines County only for a short time and that he was leaving the following day. Applicant had no money on' him or other proof that he had just arrived in Des Moines County and would be leaving the next day. Detective Klein arrested the applicant on grounds of failing to register as a sex offender. He advised him of his Miranda rights. Applicant signed a waiver of those rights and spoke with authorities. Applicant later signed a form consenting to a blood test. DNA from that blood test was linked to DNA in the sperm found in Marcy Rooney’s vaginal area following the sexual assault.

Applicant was charged with the crimes of sexual assault, kidnapping and burglary arising out of the incident. After a series of negotiations, applicant pled guilty to second-degree sexual abuse, third-degree kidnapping, and first-degree burglary on December 23, 1998. On that same date applicant was sentenced to a fifty-year enhanced sentence for the second-degree sexual abuse conviction, a ten-year sentence for the kidnapping conviction, and a twenty-five year sentence for the first-degree burglary conviction. These sentences were to run concurrently.

II. LEGALITY OF APPLICANT’S ENHANCED SENTENCE

Applicant was given the fifty-year enhanced sentence for the second-degree sexual abuse conviction pursuant to Iowa Code section 901A.2(3), enacted on July 1, 1996. This section provided as follows:

A person convicted of a sexually predatory offense which is a felony, who has a prior conviction for a sexually predatory offense, shall be sentenced to and shall serve twice the maximum period of incarceration for the offense, or twenty- *117 five years, whichever is greater, notwithstanding any other provision of the Code to the contrary. A person sentenced under this subsection shall not have the person’s sentence reduced under chapter 903A or otherwise by more than fifteen percent.

The sentencing court applied this enhancement provision to applicant’s sentence on the basis that applicant had a prior conviction in 1991 for sexual abuse, and therefore was to be sentenced to twice the maximum twenty-five year sentence on his current sexual abuse conviction.

Applicant filed a notice of appeal. His counsel on direct appeal, Stephan Japun-tich of the State Appellate Defender’s Office, deemed applicant’s appeal to be frivolous, and filed a motion to withdraw from the case on July 29,1999, pursuant to Iowa Rule of Appellate Procedure 6.104. 1 Applicant filed a motion resisting his counsel’s motion to withdraw on August 11, 1999. The supreme court did not dismiss applicant’s appeal until March 15, 2000.

During the time in which Mr. Japun-tich’s motion to withdraw and applicant’s direct appeal were pending, which was specifically July 29, 1999 to March 15, 2000, the Iowa Supreme Court decided State v. Tornquist, 600 N.W.2d 301 (Iowa 1999). In that case, decided on September 9, 1999, the supreme court interpreted Iowa Code section 901A.2(3), the same section under which applicant’s sentence for his sexual abuse conviction had been enhanced. The supreme court interpreted the enhancement provisions of section 901A.2 to operate prospectively only; that is, only convictions occurring after chapter 901A became effective on July 1, 1996 could be used to enhance a sentence imposed for a subsequent conviction of a sexually predatory offense. Tornquist, 600 N.W.2d at 307. As stated earlier, the conviction used for enhancement in applicant’s case had occurred in 1991. Under a plain reading of Tomquist at the time it was filed, applicant’s sentence would have been illegal.

On postconviction review, in which applicant filed a motion to vacate his sentence, the district court denied applicant’s motion for several reasons. The court initially concluded that applicant could not rely on subsequent reasoning by the supreme court in the 1999 Tornquist opinion to invalidate his pre-Tornquist 1998 sentence. In State v. Ortiz, 618 N.W.2d 556, 561-62 (Iowa 2000), the supreme court concluded that a sentence based upon an improper interpretation of a statute could be vacated at any time, with or without objection by the applicant. We similarly conclude that the interpretation of section 901A.2 in Tomquist may appropriately vacate an earlier sentence pursuant to that section if the sentence was based upon an improper interpretation of a statute. Ortiz, 618 N.W.2d at 561-62.

The district court further relied upon two additional factors in concluding applicant’s sentence was valid even if it were proper to apply the subsequent Tornquist

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Bluebook (online)
658 N.W.2d 114, 2002 Iowa App. LEXIS 1320, 2002 WL 31757460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gully-v-state-iowactapp-2002.